These flowers are alabaster censers swung gayly from the hands of small twin slave boys, and their burning is redolent of tropic magic. These blossoms are a pair of dancers, she in cool white taffeta with green sandals, he in a snowy satin blouse with emerald trousers: as they pirouette, how stately they are! These two gardenias are a solo and its accompaniment -- the piping of a flute to the arpeggio of a harp, a harmony which sings: "I love you; I believe in you!" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...RONDEAU by JAMES HENRY LEIGH HUNT TO HIS FRIEND IN ELYSIUM by JOACHIM DU BELLAY ON GRACE CHURCH CORNER by WILLIAM ROSE BENET DON'T BE DOWN-HEARTED (A PHILOSOPHIC POME) by BERTON BRALEY PARLEYINGS WITH CERTAIN PEOPLE OF IMPORTANCE: APOLLO AND THE FATES by ROBERT BROWNING |